Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown explained

Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown
Native Name:Institiúid Teicneolaíochta, Baile Bhlainséir
Established:1999
Closed:2019
Type:Institute of Technology
President:Dr. Diarmuid O’Callaghan
Head Label:Chairperson of Governing Body
Head:Professor Tom Collins
Students:5000
Address:Blanchardstown Road North,
Dublin 15
City:Blanchardstown, Dublin
Country:Ireland
Website:http://www.itb.ie
Administrative Staff:200

Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown (ITB) (Irish: Institiúid Teicneolaíochta Baile Bhlainséir) established in 1999, was a third-level institution, now amalgamated into Technological University Dublin.[1] It was the last-founded Institute of Technology in Ireland. The campus is located within the Business and Technology Park on Blanchardstown Road North, about 15 km from Dublin City and close to the N3 (Navan Road). This is situated in the townland of Buzzardstown, in the civil parish of Mulhuddart.

ITB provided full-time and part-time higher education courses in a range of subjects, making awards at levels from higher certificate, to PhD.

Historic statutes and governance

Statutory basis

The Regional Technical Colleges (Amendment) Act 1999 was enacted by the Oireachtas in July 1999, putting the Institute of Technology Blanchardstown on the same statutory footing as the twelve other Institutes of Technologies in Ireland already operating under the Regional Technical Colleges Acts 1992 and 1994. The institute also operated under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act,1999 and the Institutes of Technology Act 2006.

Governance

The institute was overseen by a statutory Governing Body, appointed by the Minister for Education and Science, with representation from the college community, broader local community, business interests and the State. Academic affairs and standards were controlled by the Academic Council.[2]

Delegated Authority

ITB achieved delegated authority in 2006 and had the authority to award qualifications (on behalf of HETAC)) to those completing courses up to Level 9 of the National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ).

Management

Management of the institute was led by the President (previously Director), who leads a management team also comprising the Registrar, Secretary and Financial Controller, and Heads of Schools, Departments and other functions (such as the Estates Manager, IT Manager, HR Manager).

Academic structure and courses

Schools and Departments of the Institute

Courses

Full-time and part-time courses were, and are within TUD, offered in Applied Social Studies, Business, Computing, Digital Media, Engineering, Horticulture, Languages, Social and Community Development, Sports Management and Early Childhood Care & Education, with awards made at higher certificate, ordinary degree, honours degree, Master's Degree and PhD (doctoral research) levels.

Research

The research community at ITB was, and remains within TUD, involved with research and collaboration projects with industry, community organisations and different agencies in the locality. Some of these include National Road Authority, IBM, Intel, Havoc, Wavebob, ESB, Health Service Executive, SMEs on the Innovation Voucher Scheme.As part of ITB's strategic plan 2006-2011 "Making Education Accessible" ITB established itself as a member of the research community within the third level sector in Ireland. The LINC Centre (Learning and Innovation Centre) is the centre which supports the research activities taking place in the Institute supporting technology transfer activities, applied research links with industry and links to the funding agencies for the research activities in the institute.

Campus

The college had a 22ha campus within Fingal County Council's College Business and Technology Park on Blanchardstown Road North, now designated TUD Blanchardstown Campus. The component buildings, with a total area of over 22,000 square metres, and capital cost exceeding €50 million, are:

Student life

Sports

The first sporting club was founded in ITB in 1999. Sports clubs in ITB include Gaelic games, soccer, futsal, pool, basketball, swimming, athletics, martial arts, rugby, badminton, boxing, golf, ski and Olympic handball. Many of these clubs compete at the inter varsity level and have won numerous awards.

ITB offers sports scholarships to full-time students to assist them in reaching their potential, both academically and in their chosen sport. In association with the Leinster GAA there are also a limited number of bursaries awarded to "outstanding" GAA players from Leinster who are registered students of ITB.

Societies

ITB also has a number of societies, including an Ethical Hacker Society,[3] Golf Society, Poker and Music Societies.

Students Union

The Students Union ITBSU has four student board members,[4] elected every year. Every student who registers at the institute is automatically a member,[5] with a portion of their registration fee going to the upkeep of the Union. In return every student gets a vote in a first past the post system. The Student Union office is located upstairs in the C Block, beside the Common Room. It runs seminars on Student health issues, college outings, information campaigns, and oversees the management of student clubs and societies.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Dublin colleges to merge into technological university in January. O'Brien, Carl. The Irish Times. 17 July 2018. 17 July 2018.
  2. Web site: About ITB – ITB Overview . Institute of Technology Blanchardstown . ITB . 5 October 2018.
  3. Web site: Home TU Dublin Hacker Society.
  4. Web site: Meet the Union | ITB Students Union . 26 January 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090206204026/http://itbsu.ie/meet-the-union . 6 February 2009 . dead .
  5. Web site: About | ITB Students Union . 26 January 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090208105605/http://itbsu.ie/about . 8 February 2009 . dead .